5of47McDonald's in Paradise, Calif., as the Camp Fire devours the town, 15 miles east of Chico. The top photo shows the fast-food restaurant before it was engulfed in flames.Photo: Oakland Fire Department

6of47BEFORE: Honey Run Covered Bridge, Chico
The Honey Run Covered Bridge was the only triple-span covered bridge in the U.S. Read our story here. Photo: jgreesonarts/Getty Images/iStockphoto

7of47AFTER: Honey Run Covered Bridge, Chico

The historic Honey Run Covered Bridge connecting Chico and Paradise was destroyed in the Camp Fire.Photo: Kurtis Alexander/Chronicle

8of47BEFORE: Edgewood Estates
The senior community mobile home park as seen in May 2012, located at 5427 Edgewood Lane, Paradise, Calif.Photo: Google Maps

10of47BEFORE: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Paradise
Located at 1275 Bille Rd.Photo: Google Maps

11of47AFTER: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Paradise
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints burns during Camp Fire in Paradise, Calif. on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018.Photo: Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle

12of47BEFORE:
The Paradise Gardens
The senior living community as seen in July 2012. Located at 1040 Buschmann Rd., directly across the street from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Photo: Google

17of47AFTER: Treasures from Paradise, ParadiseA destroyed antique shop is seen off of Skyway after the Camp Fire tore through the town of Paradise, Calif. on Friday, Nov. 9, 2018.Photo: Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle

18of47BEFORE: ARCO, Paradise
A view of an ARCO Gas station located at 7575 Skyway, Paradise, Calif.Photo: Google Maps

19of47AFER: ARCO, Paradise
Rocklin police officer Randy Law tends to a horse that was found wandering after the Camp Fire moved through the area on Nov. 9, 2018 in Paradise, Calif.Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

20of47BEFORE: Blackbear Diner, Paradise
A local place for American comfort food.

30of47BEFORE: Jack and the Box, Paradise
One of several fast-food spots in ParadisePhoto: Google Maps

31of47AFTER: Jack and the Box, Paradise
A Jack In The Box fast food restaurant burns as the Camp fire tears through Paradise, north of Sacramento, California on Nov. 08, 2018. Photo: JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images

44of47BEFORE: Feather River Hospital, Paradise
The Adventist Health Feather River hospital is a 101-bed acute care hospital with an array of outpatient departments and services. The hospital still stands but sustained significant damages. Photo: Google Maps

45of47AFTER: Feather River Hospital, Paradise
The Feather River Hospital burns down during the Camp fire in Paradise, Calif. on Nov. 8, 2018. Photo: JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images

46of47BEFORE: 1260 Pearson Rd., Paradise
A view of the road at 1260 Pearson Rd. in Paradise, Calif. as seen in May 2012.
Photo: Google Maps

CHICO, Butte County — Search and recovery crews found the remains of eight more people, bringing the total number of victims killed in the Camp Fire to 56, fire officials said at a Wednesday night news conference.

All eight were found in Paradise — six inside structures and two outside.

Butte County Sheriff-Coroner Kory Honea said 130 people remain “unaccounted for.” He said a partial list of the missing was released earlier in the day.

Honea said 47 of the remains have been tentatively identified but not positively confirmed.

“We have been able to locate or determine that over 200 people we thought were missing or unaccounted for are not — as of tonight we have 130 people on our unaccounted for list,” Honea said.

He said he expects the list of 130 will get shorter as more people are found. Some 461 people are working to search for victims. Officials have added cadaver dogs.

Officials said the Camp Fire has destroyed a total of 10,317 buildings — 8,650 of which are single family homes. They also said they have towed 128 vehicles that were abandoned during the fire — and many were total losses as they were badly burned.

The fire grew by 3,000 acres since Wednesday morning to 138,000 acres and remained 35 percent contained.

The catastrophic Camp Fire’s growth had slowed overnight and cooler temperatures and less wind on Wednesday were helping firefighters.

The inferno is the deadliest and most destructive in state history.

More than 13,000 people evacuated from the fire are living in shelters. An outbreak of norovirus has sickened people at one shelter in Chico, according to Butte County public health officials. They could not say how many people were ill, but reported that they had been moved to an isolated area of the shelter to prevent spread of the virus.